6 September 2018

The
National
Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine
has just released a new report on
The
Future of Voting. The recommendations in that report are clear,
unambiguous, far-reaching, and (in my opinion) absolutely correct.
I won't try to summarize it—if you can't read the whole thing, at least
read the executive summary—but a few of the recommendations are
worth highlighting:

Protect voter registration databases and
electronic poll books

Votes should be cast only by human-readable
paper ballots, though machine-marking is acceptable.

Recounts should be done by human inspection of these ballots

Risk-limiting audits should be implemented as soon as possible,
in all jurisdictions

Implicit in all of this: voting is a
systems problem. The registration systems, the pollbooks,
the actual ballot-casting and tallying, the workers, the vendors, and
more are all part of the system. This means that all of these areas
need to be addressed. I'm glad the committee recognized this.

Also: though it isn't a major part of the report, the committee did briefly
address those who suggest that the blockchain should be employed to secure
elections. Again, they were unambiguous:

While the notion of using a blockchain as an immutable ballot
box may seem promising, blockchain technology does little to
solve the fundamental security issues of elections, and indeed,
blockchains introduce additional security vulnerabilities.

If you're at all concerned about voting, read this report. My
congratulations to the committee on a wonderful job.